Beyond Coal 2012: By the numbers

  • Posted on 2 January 2013
  • By From Sierra Club reports

Here's a 2012 update on Sierra Club's Beyond Coal campaign.

• No new coal plants broke ground – the third year in a row that the campaign prevented any new coal plants from starting construction.

• No new coal export facilities broke ground in the Pacific Northwest.

• 13 proposed coal plants abandoned or defeated.

• 54 coal plants retired or announced to retire, with a grand total of 126 coal plants announced for retirement since January 2010.

• 18,789 megawatts of coal retired or announced to retire, with a grand total of 46,904 megawatts retired or announced to retire since January 2010.

• 90 percent of mercury pollution from existing coal plants - our nation’s biggest source of mercury pollution - will be eliminated, thanks to national mercury protections finalized by Environmental Protections Agency this year.

• 1,992 megwatts of solar power installed as of September 2012 – bringing the total amount of solar operating in the U.S. to 5,900 megawatts.

• 4,728 megawatts of wind power installed through Sept 2012 – an increase of 40 percent from Sept 2011. In total there is now 51,630 megawatts of wind power operating in the US.

• 12 million homes – about 10 percent of the country – could be powered by the amount of solar and wind generated in the first nine months of 2012 alone.

• 13,872 workers added to the solar industry in 2012 – a growth of 13.2 percent over 2011

• 8 percent decrease in overall electric sector carbon dioxide emissions – a twenty year low in U.S. carbon emissions – mainly due to a decline in coal-fired generation.

• 38 percent of overall electricity generation provided by coal through September 2012, a historic decline from 50 percent less than five years ago.

• 10,000+ citizens turned out to oppose new coal export facilities in the Northwest.

• 1,773,027 emails and comments sent calling on EPA and national leaders to curb coal plant pollution and invest in clean energy.

Learn more about the Club’s Beyond Coal campaign by clicking here.

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